Talk:Pali district
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External links modified
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date problem
[edit]from history section:
"In 120 AD, during the Kushana Age, King Kanishka conquered the Rohat and Jaitaran areas, parts of today's Pali district. Until the end of the seventh century AD, this area was ruled by the Chalukya King Harshavardhana along with other parts of the present state of Rajasthan." Elinruby (talk) 03:20, 27 December 2021 (UTC)
another date problem Suggestion
[edit]Some of the dates in the temple section appear to be using another calendar. Nothing wrong with this given the likely readership for the article, but please also include an explanation as the article does for some of the non-English words, as the article is already quite dense with unfamiliar material (to me at least, a random interested but unfamiliar North American). Elinruby (talk) 05:19, 27 December 2021 (UTC)
Copyeditor passing by
[edit]There's a lot of unsourced content, but the rivers might be worth keeping if they have a source. I'll leave the code down below.
;Luni River The biggest river in the district is the [[Luni River]] and its major tributaries in the district are the [[Jawai River|Jawai]], the Lilri, the [[Mithari]], the [[Sukri]], the [[Bandi River|Bandi]] and the [[Guhiya]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Administrative Setup, District: Pali|publisher=Central Groundwater Board|url=http://www.indiawaterportal.org/sites/indiawaterportal.org/files/pali_admin.pdf}}</ref> The river originates near [[Ajmer]], on the western slopes of the [[Aravalli Range]] about 550 m above sea level. About 495 km after across south-western Rajasthan, it disappears in the marshy land of [[Rann of Kutch]]. The total [[catchment area]] of the Luni River Basin in Rajasthan is 37,363 km<sup>2</sup>, covering parts of the Districts of [[Ajmer]], Pali, [[Jodhpur]], [[Nagaur]], [[Barmer, Rajasthan|Barmer]], [[Jalore]] and [[Gujarat]] in Rajasthan 330 km and in [[Gujarat]] 20 km. ; [[Guhiya]] Guhiya river originates near Khariyaniv and Tharasani villages in Pali District in the hillocks. It merges with Bandi River near Phekariya village. The catchment is about 3,835 km<sup>2</sup>, which is situated in Pali district. Its tributaries are Raipur Luni, Radia Nadi, Guria Nadi, Lilri Nadi, Sukri and Phunpharia Bala. ; [[Khari River|Khari]] (Hemawas) River Khari is formed by the confluence of small streams namely Somesar (origination: near [[Somesar]] village in the western slopes of the Aravali), Khari Kherwa, Umrawas Ka Nala (origination: Near Bagol Kanklawas in the western slopes of the Aravali) and Kotki Nadi (origination: Dewair Reserved Forest Bhakar, after flow of about 30 km). After joining of all these small streams, the river is called Khari. After flowing for about 25 km, it joins Bandi River downstream of [[Hemawas]] reservoir . Its catchment area is 1,232 km<sup>2</sup>. ; Bandi (Hemawas) Near Bombadra pickup weir [[Khari River|Khari]] and Mithari rivers join and form the Bandi River. Later [[Bandi River|Bandi]] river joins the Luni near the Lakhar village, after flowing for about 45 km. The catchment area is about 1,685 km<sup>2</sup> and situated in [[Pali District]]. ; [[Mithari]] The Mithari river originates by the confluence of local [[nullah|nalas]] on the south-western slopes of the Aravali range in the Pali district only. It disappears in sandy plains near [[Sankhwali]] village in the [[Jalore district]]. It flows in a north-west direction through Jawai, Bali, India and Falna for about 80 km. The catchment area is in Pali and Jalore districts and is 1,644 km<sup>2</sup>. ; [[Sukri]] The Sukri river is formed by the confluence of several small nalas - Ghanerav Nadi, Muthana ka Bala, Magai Nadi etc. originating from the [[Aravalli Range|Aravalli]]s in Pali and Udaipur Districts. It flows in the south-east to north-west directions for about 110 km and feeds [[Bankli Dam]] on the way. Near [[Samdari]] in [[Barmer District]], it joins Luni river. The [[Jalore]], Pali and [[Barmer district|Barmer]] Districts are covered in this Sub-Basin. Its catchment area is 3,036 km<sup>2</sup>. ; [[Jawai River|Jawai]] The Jawai river originates in [[Udaipur district]] with its main tributary [[Sukri]] in the western slopes of the Aravallis. It joins [[Khari River|Khari]] river in [[Jalore district]] near [[Sayala, Rajasthan|Sayala]]. This river flows in a north-west direction for about 96 km before that. Its catchment area is 2,976 km<sup>2</sup>.
—Tenryuu 🐲 ( 💬 • 📝 ) 05:58, 1 January 2022 (UTC)
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